When contacted by Foster’s, real estate agent Robert Gregg of Land Vest Real Estate said he was not able to comment on the sale at this time.

In late September, Lucy Tuttle, the sister of Tuttle Farm owner Bill Tuttle, told Foster’s there was a purchase and sale agreement in place with a buyer they had been working with for about a year.

“We’ve had a lot of potential buyers,” Tuttle said in September, adding many of them were only willing to purchase either the farm or the store. Tuttle said the buyer was interested in both.

According to the transfer tax on the deed, which equals $15 dollars per $1,000 of the purchase price, the property sold for approximately $1,060,900.

The farm had been in the Tuttle family since 1632, making it America’s oldest family farm. The farm originally went on the market for $3.35 million in July of 2010. Last year, the price of the farm was reduced and the Tuttle family home was removed from the sale.

All but 7½ acres of the land are under a conservation easement, meaning more than 125 acres of the land has been permanently retained for agricultural use.